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Doctor's Best French Red Wine Extract contains BioVin Advanced, a French Red Wine extract made from whole red wine grapes. BioVin Advanced contains 5% red wine trans-resveratrol and 30-35% red wine polyphenols, including anthocyanins and other flavonoids. Each capsule of Best French Red Wine Extract provides the resveratrol equivalent of 3 glasses of red wine or 12 glasses of white wine.

The whole grape constituents in BioVin Advanced enhance the body's antioxidant defenses to counteract the effects of free radicals. Resveratrol is involved in activating the human enzyme SIRT1, which is involved in regulating metabolism and healthy weight control. Resveratrol and red wine polyphenols have been shown to support healthy cardiovascular function and promote healthy aging.

Science-based nutrition

Dietary supplement

Supports healthy aging

Maintains healthy cardiovascular function

Best French Red Wine Extract Ingredients Information

Best French Red Wine Extract contains BioVin Advanced, an extract sold since 1988 that is prepared from whole red wine grapes of the Rhone Valley region of southern France. In addition to the extract's 5% red wine trans-resveratrol, it features a number of useful grape phytochemicals, including 30-35% red wine polyphenols such as flavonoid pigments called anthocyanins, and flavonols like oligomeric proanthocyanidins. Resveratrol is a stilbenoid molecule found in the skin of grapes that has a structure allowing it to donate up to three hydrogen atoms per molecule to reactive oxygen species (ROS), thereby acting as an antioxidant that neutralizes free radicals. It also appears to be especially beneficial in supporting a healthy cardiovascular system, and perhaps even longevity in humans.

Rich in Natural Antioxidants like Resveratrol

Best French Red Wine Extract with BioVin Advanced delivers a broad profile of valuable constituents present in wine grapes, including oligomeric proanthocyanidins (OPCs), gallic acid, quercetin, catechin, epicatechin and numerous others. The rich polyphenol content of red grapes makes them a potent source of antioxidants that are able to neutralize free radicals in the body. Accumulation of destructive free radicals such as ROS inevitably leads to oxidative stress in which the body's macromolecules, such as proteins, lipids, and DNA, are targeted and damaged. The body relies on its own (endogenous) antioxidants to scavenge free radicals in order to minimize cellular damage and consequently act to delay accelerated aging. Dietary antioxidants, such as those found in Best French Red Wine Extract, help to increase the body's antioxidant capacity beyond its endogenous limitations, strengthening the body's defense with powerful free radical scavenging agents.

Enhances blood antioxidant capacity

In 2006, results from a randomized, controlled trial of 41 participants indicated that polyphenols in red grape juice are readily absorbed by humans. There was a statistically significant increase in blood antioxidant concentrations (using quercetin as a marker) for individuals consuming red grape juice, compared to control subjects. This confirmed a previous study in which 14 healthy volunteers consumed 375 mg of Biovin per day for four weeks. The polyphenol content of Biovin was absorbed in the gut, and it significantly increased blood antioxidant capacities from starting values. Additionally, the extract decreased the oxidation of blood proteins, which is notable because proteins comprise important metabolic enzymes and play a critical role in detoxification and DNA maintenance. In a more recent, in vitro investigation, red wine polyphenols inhibited the oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids-especially omega-3s-in human blood.

The French Paradox

Despite the consumption of rich foods high in saturated fats, the French population is known to have relatively superior cardiovascular health. Epidemiological research by the World Health Organization revealed a cardiovascular advantage of two- to three- fold when comparing France to countries such as the USA, UK, and Sweden. This phenomenon, first reported by Dr. Samuel Black in 1819, is known as the French Paradox. The term itself was coined in 1992, about the time when researchers proposed that moderate wine consumption, which makes up over half the alcoholic drink consumption in France, accounted for the phenomenon. Since then, thousands of studies have been carried out on different aspects of the French Paradox.

A recent clinical trial found that compared to regular alcohol, red wine consumption produced more helpful cardiovascular effects. Such results in conjunction with findings from many other studies have led researchers to attribute the beneficial effects of red wine to its rich polyphenol content, with particular attention given to resveratrol, an important constituent found in Best French Red Wine Extract. French red wines, including those from the Rhone Valley, contain some of the highest concentrations of resveratrol among wines globally.

Researchers found that healthy volunteers who ingested resveratrol and grape polyphenols before eating a high-fat, high-carbohydrate meal exhibited a reduction in oxidative stress. In cell cultures of lymphocytes from healthy human donors, resveratrol has been shown as defensive against ethanol-induced oxidative DNA damage. Preclinical research has identified resveratrol to induce SIRT1 gene expression, which is also influenced by caloric restriction, and believed to promote longevity.

Promotes healthy cardiovascular function

The French Paradox and research about it suggest that myriad red wine constituents, including the polyphenols and resveratrol, are likely responsible for the observed positive effect on cardiovascular health. One proposed mechanism of action for the vascular effects of red wine polyphenols are their ability to modulate nitric oxide (NO), which is involved in healthy blood vessel function.

An early in vitro investigation into the cardiovascular effects of resveratrol found that it induced the production of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS), an enzyme responsible for the production of nitric oxide, a vital signaling molecule in the vascular system. In vitro studies have illustrated how red wine and its polyphenols can promote vasodilation (increasing blood flow) by stimulating production of nitric oxide, and can enhance the bioactivity of the NO through antioxidant activity. Subsequent research revealed that physiologically relevant amounts of resveratrol can significantly enhance the production of NO.

During a preclinical investigation in to the effect of red grape polyphenols, researchers also found that a red wine polyphenol extract was able to inhibit cardiac voltage-gated sodium channels, a phenomenon that may further contribute to the beneficial effect seen with the consumption of red wine/grape extracts.

In comparing the presence or absence of red wine on the effects of a high-fat (approximately 40% of calories from fat) Western diet on the function of blood vessel endothelium (the one cell thick layer that lines the blood vessel on the inside), researchers observed superior endothelial function in the presence of red wine. In a controlled, double-blinded trial investigating red wine and dealcoholized red wine versus the effect of cigarettes in 16 healthy non-smokers, smoking 1 cigarette increased oxidative stress in the participants, which in turn significantly impacted endothelial function. However, consumption of both regular and dealcoholized red wine was found to support healthy vessel function during smoking, leading the researchers to conclude that the polyphenols in red wine were responsible for the beneficial effects. In a subsequent trial by the same group, cardiovascular advantage seen with red wine consumption in smokers was attributed to the antioxidants in red wine.

Supports healthy aging

Oxidative stress has been one of the most widely accepted theories behind aging. It is generally accepted that managing oxidative stress can lead to longevity. Preclinical investigations have indicated that polyphenols found in grapes have a beneficial effect on neuronal and behavioral aging. Consumption of grape juice not only promoted cognitive performance, but also enhanced motor performance in animals.

About Doctor's Best

Doctor's Best produces products with the highest quality raw materials available on the market. They have direct control over and are an integral part of every aspect of product production, from formulation and raw material sourcing to finished product manufacturing. We directly purchase all active ingredients used in our products and use only the highest quality ingredients.

Every product is thoroughly researched and backed by the latest scientific studies conducted in the field. The formulations reflect the amounts of ingredients shown to be beneficial based on the results of scientific investigations. Doctor's Best uses patented, trademarked ingredients backed by scientific studies and clinical research. They never use insignificant quantities to enhance the label.

Doctor's Best directly purchases only the highest grade raw materials from proven and reputable suppliers to be put into product formulations. All raw material suppliers go through their stringent vendor qualification process, which includes a multi-step investigation including all aspects of the production and handling procedures, to insure the highest level of quality is reached.

* [1] Note: Unless otherwise noted, products on our web site have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. They are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.